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(Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potassium)Prompt Powerful PermanentIts benefcial ei. Su cases Good results areII ets beefial ef yield to P. P. P. lastingit curesfelt ae uually when other medi- you to stay curedares are uselesMakes rich, red, pure blood-cieanses the entiresystem - clears the brain -strengthens digestion and nerves.A positive specific for Blood Poison and skin diseases.Drives out Rheumatism and Stops the Pain; ends Malaria;is a wonded::1 tonic and body-builder. Thousands endorse it.F. V. UPPMAN, SAVANNAH, GA.PICKENS DRUG CO.Can You Telephoneae Veterinary?if you could telephone your veterinary liketis Far'mer in casefsickness or accident to yourlive stock, you could probably save the life of avaluable animal. Every Farmer should be prepared for such emergencies.The telephone costs very little. Why notput one on your Farm?Our free booklet gives all the details. Writefor it today. Addressrarmners Urin DeparitnentS _UT-_ f BEL TELEPHONE I .I& TEE.faE COMPANYT~ at Eo. St.EG , A-1ata -Ga H GML.Last as long as the building, and never needlrepains-never need any attention, except anee~.aI.coat of paint. Just the thing for all kinds of country buildings. Fire-proofHa.Jr.. rpemivn Canbelaidihovrwoodshineswditoutdirrtorboter.)HEATH, BRUCE, MORRIOW 00., Pickens, S. 0.1785 1912COLLEGE OF CH4ARLESTON127th YEAR BEGINS SEPTEMBER 27Entrance examirlio~n at all the county-saats on Fridiay July 5, at 9 a. m.It oi7ers courses in Ancient and Modern Lantruages, Mathemnatics. History, Poltical science, Lebtag, Chernistry, Poysics, Biology, and Engineering.Courses for B. A .. B S. anu B. S. degree with Engineering..A free tuitlin schoiarshi. to each county of South Carolina. Vacant BoyceschlarshipQ gis-ing $10 0 a yeatr and free tuition, open to competitive examinationin September.Expenses reasonable. Terms and catalogue on application. WritetoHARRISON RANDOLPH, PresidentCharleston, S. .cPICKENS BANKPICKENS, S. CCAPIT AL- (IlAND SURPLUS 417VINTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS~ J. McD Bruce, President.I. M. Mauldin. Cashier.The Drink Problemis a big one and the best answer is a drink at cur Soda Fountain.OC TT~Everything isivery cold-the water, syrups, crushtAU""ed fruits and the ice cream.CLEAN--.From top to bottom inside and outP ~jrj~pEverything we serve is absolutely pure, everyP Mi~i--drink is delicious. We serve it rightLEA VEIYOUR THIRST WITH I'S.Keowee Pharmacy-Carden SeedBURRISS METAL SHINGLES ANDGALVANIZED BARN ROOFINGShinles inti sectin nu ehv toe*aer with ourgod than any othr n z he~ i~ mrket.loigferaei. und rexpain wich others haveuse our goods. The harn Ihtiienglso has the lHurrisPatent Lock aittacehed. and it is fast taking the phwce of the"V crimp and corragated Roofing.W~ritecor call on meC or I wiln call.JOHN L. THORNLEY, Salesman UMZanufatctured byJ. T. BURRISS & SON, Anderson, S. C|)NE PHYSICIAN HAS REMEDYAdvocates Camoaign Against Use ofAlcohol Similar to One UsedAgainst Tuberculosis.Thirty years ago physicians wererather promoters of the use of alcoholboth as a stimulait and as a remedialagent Now everywhere on both sidesDf the Atlantic medical men are foremost opposers of the use of spirituousliquors as a beverage. or even as anagent in the treatment of disease.They have been living rather securelyin the tradition that alcohol had always been with them and that mostpeoples who had reached the crest ofdevelopment had been free users ofwine and beers, and that If alcoholcarried with it any peril to the race.mankind would have degenerated longago. .Close historical study shows thatdrinking was not so widespread in ancient days as now. The liquors contained less alcohol, and having no Icemachines they could not brew beer allthe year around. The strong drinks,whiskies, brandies, oocktalls, bittersand absinthe had not been lnvented.Without railroads and without bottlesthere was less distribution.With the wider diffusion of the ideathat alcohol was a food, drinking became more general and alcoholismmore ppticeable. With the tremendousawakening of science in the latter partof the ni.eteenth century, and withthe extraordinary progress of the science of medicine, it was natural thatalcohol should have its share of investigation.The facts which have been borne inupon medical men by such studies areoverwhelming, and physicians are justbeginning to understand how much responsibillty rests upon them for theabatement of this evil.All physicians are .familiar with thelarge catalogue of physical disordersdirectly due to alcohol, such as cirrhosis of the liver, dropsy, multipleneuritis, heart disease, Bright's disease, inflammation of the stomach,arteriosclerosis, delirium tremens.wet brain, and the like. The numberof these cases is constantly increasing. Betwen 20 and 25 per cent ofall the insane owe their insanity toalcohol.In answer to the question what hadbest be done for the prevention ofalcoholism, Dr. Peterson of ColumbiaUniversity thought that a campaign ofeducation such as was being carriedon in the fight against tuberculosiswas the only efficient method of warding off the evils of drink. He advisedhaving printed in brief form all thefacts on this Question which the medical profession now has at hand. InParis they have statements regardingthe dangers of heavy drinking, printedon posters and put up in every wardand waiting room of every public hospital and printed on every prescriptionblank of the Paris hospitals and dispensaries.Dr. Peterson asked why our publIcspirited citizens should not join insuch a crusade. Children should betaught these facts in the schools. Every hospital and dispensary in. thecountry should begin a similar methodof disseminating them. Our asylumsfor the insane and epileptio ought toprint the statistics of alcohol as acause of Insanity and epilepsy on every letter sent out. There are manyshopkeepers, owners of departmentstores, druggists and others whowould be willing to have Instructionsprinted on their wrapping paper. Indeed, such facts should be kept as astanding advertisement in many ofour newspapers with wide circulation.He had himself tried the experimentof printing them in briefer form onhis own prescription blanks and wished that the 132,000 other physicians inthe United States might be induced toaid the movement to this extent, forthey knew better than anyone elsethe fearful ravages of alcohoL.WHAT PHYSICIAN MOST FEARSAlcohol Is Chief injury to NervousSystem and Intellectual Power.Benefit Societies.In Great Britain a number of benefitsocieties keep abstainers and moderate drinkers In separate sections, andeven the moderate drinkers must hetemperate or they are not admitted tomembership. These societies areobliged to render reports to the governent, and such reports show anaverage of 19 days of sickness peryear for the non-abstainers, or moderate drinkers, against 14 days or lessfor the abstainers.Dr. William L, Reid of Scotland,who cites the statistics of these benefit societies, quotes this significantpassage from Dr. Buchner, professorof medicine in Munich university:"Alcohol kills the largest number ofvictims by ambush, as It were, in thatit undermines the powers of resistance to sickness, so that the apparently quIet, temperate drinker sucumbs to a lung Inflammation or to aninfectious disease which the sound,normal body easily overcomes. Butwhat the physician most fears In alcohol Is chiefly the Injury to the nervous system and the intellectual powers."Reputation la Light."Reputation is In itself only a farthig candle, of a wavering and uncertain flame. and easly blown out, but Itis the light by which the world looksfor and finds merit."'-Lowell.THOUGHTS OF LOVEThe modest man Is the last to triamph over a woman.-Robert Hichens.Every man is unusual to the girdwho is fond of him.-Horace W. C.Newte.Love is like the measles; It hasmore power when It attacks one latein life.-Constance Howell.Love is a thing to a large extent InIts beginnings voluntary and controlable, and at last quite involuntary.H. G. Wells.Love seeks mutuality, and grows bythe sense and hope of response, or weshould love beautiful In animatethings more than we do.--H. G. We~s.Men like to be comfortable, and theman has yet to be bora who can becomfortable on a pedestal. The ordinary pedestal is too narrow, and therdinarv man is too broad.-CurtisFor Infants and Children.The Kind You Have.............Always BoughtALCOHOL 3 PER CBENT.AVegeteparioar&As Bsimilatintheo me a 6rs -thetingtheSnathsandBowdsofSiganatrPrmtesDigsinhenessand mRit ofOpiui-Morphine nrMlNOT NARCOTIC., ~~IBM~ E InUseAprfectRemedyforot SonsourtoachDftvtdWorms,Convulsn.FeveriskssadLossormFor OverFAche Signat rThirty YearsNEWYRS~ JJ+GASTORIAExct Copy of Wrappe. THE CNTAU.coMPne, NWw VoaX envT.here i no mighty problem that the wise ones have not solved;The tell us how from nothingness creation was evolvedWow whirling mist went twisting till it gathered into0 suns,#nd how the spun -and spattered off a million lesser ones ;&nd how, attracted and repelled, these suns set off through space,Until at last, the settled in the paths that now they trace.ut through it all no one has told, if anybody knows.What alchemy it is that puts the perfume in a rose.The know the distance to the stars--the measurement is plain;Each planet's weight is told by some great scientific crane;Trlangles are laid out whose base ends in the dim unknown,Upon some drifting star whose radiance has never shown;Then faultless calculation bids them tell, with faith serene,1he orbit of a satellite whose light is nevier seen.But who can tell the wqy a bee goes straightly to its home,When burdened with the sweetness for the empty honeycomb?All the foundations of the earth, that rose in massive tiersCf strata, have been given dates that span a million years;And now we speak with knowledge of the old primeval sitUpon whose gloomy barrenness the earth was slowly built.Rut who may give the reason for the flowing of the tidesThe silent laughter of the sea that lifts and shakes Its sides?And who may tell us what it is of night, or noon, or mornThat makes the self-same clod qf earth give us both wheat and corn?Where does the lily get its white, the cherry get its red PUpon what fbrm' qf airy food are all the orchids fed PWhy does the dirt that yilds the grass its hue of living greenGild alt the dandelions with their gleaming golden sheen?And why? And why? Like children we may ask the lengthy listQf questions as to little things, nor know how they exist.The ancient and the farawa.'y wa think we understand,But falter when we think u;oni the3 wonders close at hand.REVIEWING THE FLEET." A. . JNEA rp rp>*ppy|eRight Mind and Heart IatBy REV. E P. MARVIN fATheological seminary aston- tA PROFESSOR In Princeton iished us by saying that "nine- Ctenths of the happiness or fmisery of home life depends IDn temper.Good temper is a sweet, kindly and Ibenevolent disposition . of mind and aheart. It inclines us to be satisneditnd pleased with the treatment wereceive in the relative duties of lie. a[t is an eminent and a comprehensive CChristian grne. C"Be ye kind one to another, tender- ahearted, forgiving one another, even ats God for Christ's sake bath forgivenyou."What are we to think of those who 1lways "live in the worst place in the 1world?" We mn fnd friends aMywhere i we show ourselves friendly 9A bee sucks honey where spiders suck epoison. Do not be irritable and doiot irritate others. Avoid the weakand sore spot in your neighbors andmitate the mignonette rather than:he nettle.Seek Only the Truth.Open your eyes to the truth, thebeautiful and the good around you,mnd see It you cannot be sweet. Ifrou carry a shoulder.-bag with theaults of others in front and your>wn behind, Just turn it around. Forlet self in your absorbing apprecia- c:ion of others and yofir devotion to Iheir welfare. Imitate him who "cameiot to be ministered unto, but to minister." I"Peace and good will toward men" twill make use unwilling to believe evel-eports or to circulate them. Madamtumor is a fiar and we should be 1ilow to believe her reports, which are I'alse or distorted. Her stories grownarvelously. We should be veryredulous of good reports and incred- cilous of evil reports, especially on- oerning good people. c"Trifles light as air" are to thecandalmonger "confirmations strongLS proofs of Holy Writ." Some one 1ays, "For embittering life, for break- 0nig up communities, for destroying zhe most sacred relationships, for devtsting homes, for withering up mennd women, for taking the bloom of .,:hildhood, in short, for sheer gratu- ttous misery-producing power, this inuence stands alone" Life and deathire in the power of an ill-temperednd uncontrolled tongue. It "outven~ms all the worms of Nile." Moreall by the tongue than by the sword.s it not well to follow the example ofnedical doctors--examine the tongue?tead the scathing satire of St. James>n the tongue, chapter 1: 1-10. "Beiold how great a matter a little firedindleth." .A friction tongue, like ariction match, may set a city on fire.'The hand that kindles cannot quench.he flame." "But I take it all back."fou cannot take it all back. The asassin takes his dagger back from theieart, but not its deadly work.All of us have suffered enough toppreciate this. "A lie will travel~rom coast to coast while truth isputting on its boots. Whosoever cir- 'ilates scandal should be held responible, like those who circulate base:oin. Do not let any one make yoursar a sewer for scandal. A dog that ~brings a bone will carry a bone.(Forgetfulness for wrongs.Be radical concerning right andrrong. but be wise and amiable. BeSIDE-DRESWe are getting out a 4-10-2 i:guano; four per cent Phos- bphoric Acid, ten per cent of cammonia arnd two per cent of fipotasm. AlsG a 4-72 guanoour per cent phosphoricacid sand seven per ezn of ammo- snia and two per cent of potash. ~These are specials for side cdressing and we have taken agreat pains to get them up so tas to give the best possiblereults. This fertilizer is heavily ticharged with nitrate of soda, bto be available as food for the ryoung plant as quickly as pos- asible. Then we use with this f<nitrate of soda a combination nof high grade fish and blood to ~2come in as the nitrate of soda agives out, to back up the work nstarted by the nitrate og soda, siand to make it fruit on up to tite tod and mature as much fo h>f the fruit as possible. cWe thiuk this Fertilizer am- kmoniated with soda, fish and Ablood is a better side dresser aand it is better for the soil than psoda by it-self. A heavy dose b>f soda on land leaves the soil a:nan exhausted and thirsty 1:ondition. Soda by itself has .tlhe effect on a crop of a good \soa king season fallowed by dry aweather. This special predara- n:ion we are getting up for side edressing ibeing ammonlated tiwith sopa and tish and bloob siaas <ifect of a good soaking a:season folio xed by showers e:.rtil frost. That is all a man iiwant on a crop --a good soak- '1ng season followed by show- yers.We bough more fish this 01'ear than we have usad, as tihere was less ammoniate b<~oods sold this year than usu- fcL. So we have a surplus of fish is~n hand to use in this side- crressing- The fish may clog up alour distributor every now and pihen but you will looe no tme fapen Tor explanations tnat may paim.to evil. A mistake is not a lie, andccentricity is not sin. Cultivate thetrace of forgetfulness for all wrongs.nd remembrance for all kindness, ando make memory a fount of. joy andot of tears. Suppose some one doesLot like you very well, probably youike yourself too well. Take care ofour character, and let God take caref your reputation. Live the lie down.A man basely slandered showed such:ood nature and even joy, that he hado explain himself by saying, "I amo glad it is not true!" Learn from.n enemy what your faults are. DoLot chase scandal. If you try to talkt down or retaliate, you may be likehe bird that rushes to put out * theIre kindlled by the hunter for a snare,Lnd only fans it to consume her.teturn good for evil and you get morehan "even." If the report is true,onfess it, and forsake the ski. Ifaite. pray to be kept from it. If inluential, expect criticism. Only chaeterless people escape censure. Birds>eck at the fairest fruit. The bestLpple tree on my way to school inthildhood was all but clubbed to death.rhe woe of the Gospel is upon you if11 men speak weil of you; and bene.iction if you are reviled and perseuted- Always forgive, never retaliate,nd never ask an apology. Do notsk what reople say about you. Bepect God's judgnent first, that ofonscience next, and C the wodtd last.)o not stumble at a straw and florake your church and your God.Let the benefits you receive be enraved on marble tablets, never to befraced. Let injuries only be writtena sand, to be washed out by therat wave of passing time. "Be reInd one to another, tender-hearted.Drgiving one ar.otber. even as God:r Christ's sakv bath forgiven you."BY OUR OWN OWLA man of commanding presence Isfat man with money.Scolding a man because he isn'tlever isn't going to put desverness inLiM.All men are born free and equalut so many of them want to arguehe point.A hero Is a men who can do arave thing and then not go on theocture platform.No matter how much a man says aircus bill lies, you will find him earlyn the grounds the dag the showocmSon, hale lots of mbton, but keeheaded right. Ntapoleon was longn ambition, but he dpended toome1h en it onceWhat would be done with g manrho dyed his whiskers and expected> be complimented as Is a womanrhen she changes her figure with aow oceettaITTC1SMS Ag0U71 WONENWomen sometimes deceive the lover-never the friend.-Louis Sebastie&lercier.A timorous woman drapg into herrave before she Is done deliberating.-Joseph Addison.Her voice wa ever soft. gendend low-an excellent thing In woman.-Willam Shakespeare.You see ia no place the conversaLou. the perfection of speech. uo mucha in accomplished wonan.-61r Richrd Steele.There are women so hard to pleasehat It seems a's if nothing less thann angel will suit them; hence Itomes that they often meet with.evils.-Marguerite do Vdlois.S AS EARLY ASi stopping to clean it out,ecause you will make betterrops by your fertdlizar havingish in it.You don't loose any time bytopping during the workingeason of a crop to have yourslow sharpened, because youan do so much better workfter you get them back fromdie shop.It is just the same way withhis fish business, Cleaning fishones out of your ghano distibutor is time well spen becuse it gaurauteesfish in yourertilixer, and that mightyearly guarantees a good cropLpply this side-dressng earlynd often. One of the best ifot the best farmers in thetate fertilizers his crop everyme he cultivates ii. In i io6e made 864 pounds of lint'>tton to the acre. We don'tnow what he made last year.ny ginner who nas ever keptb on it will tsll you that 1,300ounds of seed cotton that haseen side-drrssed will turn outs heavy a bale of cotton at5oo pounds of seed cotton1at has not been side-dressedVe were told that last Fall byginner and we took up theiattea with other ginners andvery ma.i of them who invesgated it agreed 10 it. Thedc-dressing develops the lintrd makes more of it. Thisxcess of lent on the~ seed willore than pay for fertiliz.r.his promicrs to be a goodear to make all the cottou,>tton seed, forage ond everyther crop possible, as indicanns are now that all these willein demane at good prices,ir it looks now as if theren't goeing to ce any "bumper'ops of any kind this year,idwe natually expect g-odices and you all know howst crop 'counts up" when 1PUT END TO RIERYTARIFF SITUATION SUMMED UPIN FEW WORDS.Figures Will Show Where "Prote.tion" Is No Longer NecessaryConditions That Call forPrompt, Declve Action.With respo# to the taM it is astrac now an it was wh* Mr. Cleve.land first said that it Is a condUon not a theory, that confronts u.Watever be sad or freetrade it is muchIn point Of fad we are sQ enm.shanin a complqZiaty of poteotin, andmillons of peo1 are so dependentc% it for extence, or think they are,that tarid reform Must be bandedwith cpre.But hat *p o rod excnse for dIf.tory and M meAsure in casewhiere protecton Is clearly unnecemay o4 serve b better purposetbe that of hielhtig monopoly andWhere It It shown that 6 protectedAmerioma product I oontinually andbcresily~lV sold abroad at a lowerprice tan Is exacted at home, theproc that protection is ro longerbeeded k cninluyg,There Is no 4ed ci welting for 8bo-r to fnd ont the comparativ cost(9 produetio bee and elsewhereNo wronq will be done by withdrawan tectain in ay such Case.baethecondition that con,fronts t calls 1or prompt and de,csive Iobt .The butries arcerned have beoomE the most powervftl and arogant of alL They Inatuence the greatest number of votersemployes an4 others. They fill partycampaign tresurles Thy own partyboeseeIt is 9 a..itabiq c-d -tion whweprottio ba beeA too long omened, and te protectedbave grwnunworupulous as wel as sro.& Thevictims must meet It by a preemptoryf o t Immediate reandntal dr VprIV es enjoed by they must insist thatno nger be robbed by#a whost eaemous wealth thead tmo cP E ite.-e& -What Mother Said.Tbes a golden mine of wisdomIr the things that Mother said.And each word's a shining nuggette enrich the path we tread.L~hrough we'falter r the waysideW~hore vef hopes ; footsteps led,tem'ry sprs a fre -h endeavor3or some thing that Mother said.When the rose of Youth Is fadnngIn the garden of our dreams,And the mists of Time are shadingStars that burn with Itful gleams,Hope will blossom as a lily;Skies will azure radiance spread.When the heart recalls the wisdomOf ome things that Mother said.H mernaxm heard in childhoodwtheir impress through the yearsWhen Life's joys have well-nigh vanishedIn a wilderness of tears:Yet the suns will rise In splendorTo dispel the doubts and dread.And the heart grow warm and tenderior some thing that Mother said..- A .e-ane- Groves, in New York Press.The inspiration.Vhere'er a noble deed is wrought.Wheneer is Spoken a noble thought,Our hearts. In glad surprise,To higher levels rise.The tidal wave of deeper soulsInto our Inmn=+ being rolls.And lifts us unawaresOut of alt maner cares..Honor to thoee whege words or deedsThus helps us in our daily needs,And by their overflowRaise us from what is low.-oangenow. "Santa Filomena."The Unseen Bridge.There is a bridge whereof the spanIs rooted in the heart of manAnd reaches, without ple or tEtyato the great white throe of GdIts trate Is In human iaIPOSSIBLEyou get good prices.This seems to be the timeof all times to side dress withan open hand and make everypound of orop possible, whenall products will be needed atprices that will mean money tothe producers.Think this over. If youdon't think heavy side-dressing pays, why of course wewouldn't use any. In fact, if Idid't think fertilizer paid, Iwouldn't use any at all. Butif you decide it will not onlypay for itself and make youseveral times its cost in clearprofit, then you will need noargument as to what to doabout making this application.Our advice is to apply somegood fertilizer liberally andjust as early as possible. Don'twait too long to apply itQii9efexpect the best results, especially on cotton,Now remember, our 4-10-2and our 4-7-2 are in a class tothemselves when it comes toside dressing.We reccommend them to -y'ou with our old reliable 8-4-4goods and know if you willuse them liberally they willpay you a profit of severaltimes their cost, to say nothingo~f making a crop you will bejproud oi and build up, iusteadof exhaust your land, an itemin itself worth more to youah.-n the cost of the goods.From every stondpoint it willpay you to side-dress liberallyand if you do you can't findanything to use in the claIwith our goods.ASK FOR GOODS MADE BY4nderson Phosphatek Oil Co. Anderson,SCV. B. FREEMAN. Local Agenti